woody plant

angiosperm origin

The first angiosperms are thought to have been massive, woody plants appropriate for a rainforest habitat. Most of the smaller, more delicate plants that are so widespread in the world today evolved later, ultimately from tropical rainforest ancestors. While it is possible that even earlier forms existed that await discovery, the oldest angiosperm fossils—leaves, wood, fruits, and flowers...

description

...two kinds of organs, the stem and the leaves, while roots have one type of organ, the root itself. Systems of classification are often based upon the longevity of the portions of plant aboveground. Woody plants are trees and shrubs whose shoots are durable and survive over a period of years. They are further classified into deciduous and evergreen plants. Deciduous plants drop their leaves at...

distribution in

deserts

Certain plants, including large woody plants and some herbaceous perennials, can remain physiologically active to some extent through dry periods. Plants employ several strategies to carry this off: water storage organs, such as the succulent stems of cacti, euphorbias, and ice plants, hold water until it is needed; very deep root systems reach soil moisture at depth; and certain features, such...

grasslands

Woody plants, which might be expected to shade the grasses and dominate the vegetation, are disadvantaged by the shortness of the growing season. Nevertheless, in the absence of heavy mammalian grazing and especially of regular fires, some trees and shrubs that grow vigorously may become established. Thus, the grasslands in such situations are maintained by these natural, or seminatural,...

savannas

Through the grazing pressure they exert, animals also can alter the balance between woody plants and grasses in a savanna—in either direction, depending on their feeding habits. Grass-eating mammals may overgraze and push the grass component of the vegetation toward local extinction; however, even high populations of these creatures cannot eliminate woody plant species, whose upper...

Rosales

Members of Rosaceae are generally woody plants, mostly shrubs or small to medium-size trees, some of which are armed with thorns, spines, or prickles to discourage herbivores. The genus Rubus (blackberries, raspberries, and brambles) chiefly contains arching shrubs or scramblers of irregular, often tangled appearance. Herbaceous perennials are found in several Rosaceae genera, most...

Sapindales

Sapindales is overwhelmingly composed of woody plants—mostly trees, large shrubs, and woody climbers. The latter are particularly common in Sapindaceae (Paullinia, Serjania, and Urvillea) and Anacardiaceae (Toxicodendron). Many beautiful forest trees belong to this order. The largest trees are in Sapindaceae; they include Schleichera oleosa (Ceylon oak),...

vascular system

In woody plants, a vascular system of secondary vascular tissue develops from a lateral meristem called the vascular cambium (Figure 8). The vascular cambium, which produces xylem and phloem cells, originates from procambium that has not completely differentiated during the formation of primary xylem and primary phloem. The cambium is thought to be a single row of cells arranged as a cylinder...

As defined above, the epidermis is the outermost protective layer of the primary plant body. At a certain stage in their life cycle, woody plants cease to grow in length and begin to add to their girth, or width. This is accomplished not by the addition of more primary tissue but by the growth of secondary vascular tissue around the entire circumference of the primary plant body. The secondary...